Notice: With the Laurelin server shutting down, our website will soon reflect the Meriadoc name. You can still use the usual URL, or visit us at https://meriadocarchives.org/
“Thendryt? I wanted to talk to you,” Lilleduil said, watching as Raolor walked away. Thendryt turned his face towards her slightly, but still kept his eyes upon the Hammer.
A storm raged in his mind. He felt his blood boiling, he heard the voices from the past, their chattering, their screaming and shouting rising again, until they reached the gates of his Fëa. And all the time, he saw him in front of the eyes of his mind:
Ost Ringdyr was over a full days travel by horse away from Glân Vraig.
Thendryt was riding slowly along the edge of a ravine. As the terrain became more treacherous, he dismounted and started leading Bovad.
The sounds of a voice brought him to a sudden halt. He drew his sword by instinct as he spotted the figure above him.
“A message, Man of the Warband, from Lord Dolthafaer!”
Female, had to be an Elf. An Elf with a bow, he noticed.
The arrow didn’t hit him, but was aimed at a tree a couple of meters in front of him.
After successfully getting the hobbits to Imlardis, Sigfread settled in the Hall of Fire along with the hobbits and his new elven friends!
A competition of archery was proposed and Sigfread could not resist!
He was sure to come in last of the four... but he wanted to participate anyway!
The outcome however was supprising
Dolth became first, followed by Sara... But Sigfread did manage to best Yrill!... Then again...
Yrill noted the other earlier that she was quite tired. So it must have been the luck of the moment.
The ruins of Delossad were usually never completely quiet. Birds nesting in the forgotten halls, or the wind howling through narrow passages usually gave the darkness character. Not tonight. Tonight, Thendryt heard nothing, save from his own boots and breathing. Even though he was wearing chainmail, he was usually able to sneak in the darkness. At least to an extent. But the silence that surrounded him was treacherous, and each little chain in his mail seemed to make some kind of crackle.
Dolthafaer frowned at the still form of Laelas – the name of the injured Elf they had come across in the darkness of Delossad – lying sprawled upon a thick bed of grass and half-closed flowers. He was a Wood-Elf, friend of Barangolf and Tinurendis, one of those missing from the caravan that they had been searching for in the Hithaeglir.
Dolthafaer halted at the head of the stairs and cast his eyes over the shadowed courtyard below. To his staggering relief, Yrill was not to be seen. She must have reached the shelter of the pillars. He had not heard the sound of an arrow being released, but even so – this was an enemy that did not deserve to take down his huntress.
Dolthafaer had not been expecting trouble on this routine patrol. It had simply been an excuse to leave the Valley for a day or two and stretch his legs over familiar paths. He had asked Yrill and Luthelian to join him almost as an afterthought; he wished to see how his most troublesome recruit was improving, and he knew better by now than to leave Yrill behind when there was even the smallest chance of adventure.
The eagle batted its golden eye and looked accusingly at him, as if it was Parnard's fault that it was so cold, and he was so far from the Valley, and so tired from roaming all night searching for him.
His left hand wavered in the air in front of the sharp beak as his right hand crept forward to remove the small scroll tied to its leg.
"Confounded bird!" he cried out, as the eagle nipped at him again and again, and struck him full in the face with its wing.